0.0.7 • Published 4 years ago

@jacobsee/react-oauth-flow v0.0.7

Weekly downloads
7
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
4 years ago

React OAuth Flow

Note to users

This is a fork of Adam Bergman's react-oauth-flow. It had not been updated in a while and I needed to make changes. If the original package becomes actively maintained again, that is worth taking a look at.

Specifically, this fork:

  • Removes client secrets (they are not secure when used in the browser)
  • Makes token requests to the OAuth2 server compatible with Keycloak/Red Hat SSO

– Jacob See

What is react-oauth-flow

react-oauth-flow is a small library to simplify the use of OAuth2 authentication inside your react applications.

It will bring you a simple component to generate the necessary link to send your users to the correct location and it will give you a component to perform the authorization process once the user is back on your site.

Installation

npm install @jacobsee/react-oauth-flow --save
yarn add @jacobsee/react-oauth-flow

Requirements

react-oauth-flow requires fetch to be available on the window-object. In modern browsers it's there by default. But for older browsers you might need to provide it yourself as a polyfill.

If you are using create-react-app it's already included as a polyfill. Otherwise I recommend whatwg-fetch (which create-react-app also uses).

Usage

react-oauth-flow exports three functions:

<OauthSender />

import React, { Component } from 'react';
import { OauthSender } from 'react-oauth-flow';

export default class SendToDropbox extends Component {
  render() {
    return (
      <OauthSender
        authorizeUrl="https://www.dropbox.com/oauth2/authorize"
        clientId={process.env.CLIENT_ID}
        redirectUri="https://www.yourapp.com/auth/dropbox"
        state={{ from: '/settings' }}
        render={({ url }) => <a href={url}>Connect to Dropbox</a>}
      />
    );
  }
}

Use <OauthSender /> to send your users to the correct endpoints at your OAuth2 service.

Props

PropTypeRequiredDefaultDescription
authorizeUrlstringyes-The full url to the authorize endpoint, provided by the service
clientIdstringyes-Your client id from the service provider
redirectUristringyes-The URL where the provider should redirect your users back
stateobjectno-Additional state to get back from the service provider (read more below)
argsobjectno-Additional args to send to service provider, e.g. scope. Will be serialized by qs

Render

<OauthSender /> can be used in three ways, either by a render-prop, children-function or component-prop. In either way they will recieve the generated url as a prop/arg.

const RenderProp = props => (
  <OauthSender {...props} render={({ url }) => <a href={url}>Connect</a>} />
);

const ChildrenFunction = props => (
  <OauthSender {...props}>{({ url }) => <a href={url}>Connect</a>}</OauthSender>
);

const Link = ({ url }) => <a href={url}>Connect</a>;
const ComponentProp = props => <OauthSender {...props} component={Link} />;

State

You can pass some state along with the auth process. This state will be sent back by the OAuth-provider once the process is done. This state can for example then be used to redirect the user back to where they started the auth process.

<OauthReceiver />

import React, { Component } from 'react';
import { OauthReceiver } from 'react-oauth-flow';

export default class ReceiveFromDropbox extends Component {
  handleSuccess = async (accessToken, { response, state }) => {
    console.log('Successfully authorized');
    await setProfileFromDropbox(accessToken);
    await redirect(state.from);
  };

  handleError = error => {
    console.error('An error occurred');
    console.error(error.message);
  };

  render() {
    return (
      <OauthReceiver
        tokenUrl="https://api.dropbox.com/oauth2/token"
        clientId={process.env.CLIENT_ID}
        redirectUri="https://www.yourapp.com/auth/dropbox"
        onAuthSuccess={this.handleSuccess}
        onAuthError={this.handleError}
        render={({ processing, state, error }) => (
          <div>
            {processing && <p>Authorizing now...</p>}
            {error && (
              <p className="error">An error occurred: {error.message}</p>
            )}
          </div>
        )}
      />
    );
  }
}

Use <OauthReceiver /> to handle authorization when the user is being redirected from the OAuth2-provider.

Props

PropTypeRequiredDefaultDescription
tokenUrlstringyes-The full url to the token endpoint, provided by the service
clientIdstringyes-Your client id from the service provider
redirectUristringyes-The URL where the provider has redirected your user (used to verify auth)
argsobjectno-Args will be attatched to the request to the token endpoint. Will be serialized by qz
location{ search: string }no-Used to extract info from querystring (read more below)
querystringstringno-Used to extract info from querystring (read more below)
tokenFetchArgsobjectno{}Used to fetch the token endpoint (read more below)
tokenFnfuncnonullUsed to bypass default fetch function to fetch the token (read more below)

Events

  • onAuthSuccess(accessToken, result)
ArgTypeDescription
accessTokenstringAccess token recieved from OAuth2 provider
resultobject
result.responseobjectThe full response from the call to the token-endpoint
result.stateobjectThe state recieved from provider, if it was provided earlier
  • onAuthError(error)
ArgTypeDescription
errorErrorError with message as description of what happened

Render

<OauthReceiver /> can be used in three ways, either by a render-prop, children-function or component-prop. Either way they will recieve three props/args:

  • processing: boolean: True if authorization is in progress
  • state: object: The state received from provider (might be null)
  • error: Error: An error object if an error occurred
const RenderProp = props => (
  <OauthReceiver
    {...props}
    render={({ processing, state, error }) => (
      <div>
        {processing && <p>Authorization in progress</p>}
        {state && <p>Will redirect you to {state.from}</p>}
        {error && <p className="error">Error: {error.message}</p>}
      </div>
    )}
  />
);

const ChildrenFunction = props => (
  <OauthReceiver {...props}>
    {({ processing, state, error }) => (
      <div>
        {processing && <p>Authorization in progress</p>}
        {state && <p>Will redirect you to {state.from}</p>}
        {error && <p className="error">Error: {error.message}</p>}
      </div>
    )}
  </OauthReceiver>
);

const View = ({ processing, state, error }) => (
  <div>
    {processing && <p>Authorization in progress</p>}
    {state && <p>Will redirect you to {state.from}</p>}
    {error && <p className="error">Error: {error.message}</p>}
  </div>
);
const ComponentProp = props => <OauthReceiver {...props} component={View} />;

location and querystring

The props location and querystring actually do the same thing but both can be ommitted. But what they do is still important. When the OAuth2-provider redirects your users back to your app they do so with a querystring attatched to the call. <OauthReceiver /> parses this string to extract information that it needs to request an access token.

location is especially useful if you're using react-router. Because it provides you with a location-prop with all the information that <OauthReceiver /> needs.

querystring can be used if you want some control over the process, but basically it's window.location.search. So if it is not provided <OauthReceiver /> will fetch the information from window.location.search.

tokenFetchArgs

The prop tokenFetchArgs can be used to change how the token is received from the service. For example, the token service for Facebook requires a GET request but the token service for Dropbox requires a POST request. You can change tokenFetchArgs to make this necessary change.

The following are the default fetch args used to fetch the token but they can be merged and overriden with the tokenFetchArgs:

{ method: 'GET', headers: { 'Content-Type': 'application/json' }}

tokenFn

The prop tokenFn can be used to change how the token is fetched and received from the service. It's a way to bypass the default fetch all together and use your own. For example, if your access-token comes in the headers instead of the response body you will have to use your own fetch function to get those. Or perhaps you already have a custom built fetch function that communicates with your backend and you want to make use of it.

Your function will receive the url from the OauthReceiver, it takes the tokenUrl and builds it up with all the other needed parameters so you don't have to. It will also receive the tokenFetchArgs parameter just in case you need it. if you don't, just ignore it.

createOauthFlow

import { createOauthFlow } from 'react-oauth-flow';

const { Sender, Receiver } = createOauthFlow({
  authorizeUrl: 'https://www.dropbox.com/oauth2/authorize',
  tokenUrl: 'https://api.dropbox.com/oauth2/token',
  clientId: process.env.CLIENT_ID,
  redirectUri: 'https://www.yourapp.com/auth/dropbox',
});

export { Sender, Receiver };

createOauthFlow is a shorthand to create instances of both <OauthSender /> and <OauthReceiver /> with equal settings to keep things DRY.

These instances can then be used as described above. All arguments can also be overridden when you use the created components.

Args

ArgTypeRequiredDefaultDescription
optionsobjectyes-Options object
options.authorizeUrlstringyes-The full url to the authorize endpoint, provided by the service
options.tokenUrlstringyes-The full url to the token endpoint, provided by the service
options.clientIdstringyes-Your client id from the service provider
options.redirectUristringyes-The URL where the provider should redirect your users back

License

MIT

Contributors

Adam Bergman💻 📖Jamie Wright💻 📖
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